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Given the recent real advances of women in society, is it not time that a crucial blow (i.e.

the free availability of [sensitive] DNA testing) be struck in the name of male emancipation, fairness and genuine “equal opportunity”?

I have no information to say whether it was or was not obvious from the physical characteristics of the infant that died, that it did or did not have Down's Syndrome.

Also, if a mother has been severely disabled through a childhood accident, does this make it more likely she can give birth to an infant with Down's Syndrome?

What information can you give on the testing of an infant (who died) for the presence or absence of Down's Syndrome?

Some kind of sample(s) was/were taken for analysis.

If you absolutely did not, is there any possibility that you could have come in contact with sperm some way other than full intercourse?

Is that not almost the same as saying that alcohol levels cannot be measured in a drunk driver without her consent?

I think that the difficulty about paternity testing without the consent of the mother is that if the '"alleged father" proves not to be the biogical father of the child, then he did not have the right to authorise the taking of a sample from that child without the informed consent of its definite and undisputed parent - its mother.

My mother has two sisters and a brother, their father was very old when my mother and her younger sister was born and they both look very different to their older sister and brother.

The court is powerless to force the issue and the mother keeps trying still to force the child on me. If they continue not to do so, take the issue up with the Senior Registrar's office, or the office of the minister for Health, under whose department the births Marriages and Deaths Register falls.

This woman cannot force the child on you if you have a DNA test that shows the child is not related to you.